Here’s How to Grow Your Tastiest Love
Apples Ever!
Q. Mike: What is the best
time to put tomato plants in the ground?
---Ray in Hatfield, Pa.
Mr. Mike: Right now my tomato plants are about 8 inches high. I
want to work them up into getting used to the outside; how exactly
should I do this?
---Chuck in Leesburg, Virginia
Mike: My wife and I recently bought a tomato plant—our first attempt at
growing something to eat! Its about two feet high and seems to be
standing okay, but most gardens I see use stakes to help the plants
stay up. Should we do the same? Thank you.
---Ray and Melissa
in Plainsboro, NJ, just across Route 1 from Princeton.
Mike: I started 3 kinds of tomatoes by placing two seeds in each pot.
Now most of the pots sport two plants. Should I let both grow and plant
them that way when the weather is warm, or should I prune down to one
seedling per pot? Thanks,
--Dan in Swarthmore, Pa.
I have some crushed oystershells left over from making rock for my
saltwater aquarium, and was wondering if they would serve the same
purpose as the eggshells you always recommend when planting tomatoes.
--Kevin in Cochranville, PA
A. Thanks, all! This is the
perfect time of year for me to help get everybody’s tamata plants off
to a great start, so I’m going to answer your questions—and more—with
my Top Ten Tips for Terrific Tomatoes!
1. Thin them out! This is the
hardest thing to do in gardening, but if you leave more than one plant
in each pot, none of them will thrive. If you’re good at this kind of
thing, use a sharp knife to cut through the root mass, then pot each
one up again separately. (Don’t try and pull them apart!) A safer bet
is to snip off the weakest ones with a little pair of scissors. Lose
the ones with the thinnest stalks—unlike us, thick stalks are
good.
2. Don’t rush the season!
Actual frost isn’t the only consideration. Tomatoes are tropical plants
that don’t like to catch a chill. So don’t even think about planting
them outdoors until nighttime temps are in the fifties. My ‘last
average frost date’ is May 15th (find yours online or contact your
local county extension office), but I often wait until June 1st if
Spring has been a little slow.
3. ‘Harden off’ your tomatoes before
you plant them. Take the potted plants out in the morning, water
them well, place them where they’ll get some sun and then bring them
back inside that evening Repeat this for a few days, ideally,
increasing the amount of sun they’ll get each day. Then leave them out
all night for another couple of days (unless overnight temps drop below
the mid to high forties, then bring them back in—tomatoes have very
little sense of humor about these things). Don’t neglect this step!
Plants that go right from a warm home or greenhouse into the
unpredictable outdoors often suffer severe early season setbacks.
4. Scramble some eggs for them!
Or, yes—crushed oyster shells, if you got ‘em. Both are great natural
sources of calcium—a
nutrient often greatly lacking in our soils but that helps you grow
better tomatoes two ways! It helps the plants regulate their water
needs, preventing nasty conditions like cracking and blossom end rot
when the weather is too wet, too dry or too roller-coaster. And
tomatoes need calcium to achieve their full flavor potential! I put the
crushed shells of a dozen eggs in each planting hole. No
eggshells? Take a five-gallon bucket to any restaurant that
serves breakfast and you’ll get all you need in one day. Otherwise, put
a handful of a calcium-rich natural fertilizer, like “Tomatoes
Alive” from Gardens Alive, in the hole. (Toss in some compost
too!)
5. Pick the proper spot.
Before you put your tomatoes in the ground, take a good look at their
potential planting areas and give them the site that gets the most
morning sun, so the wet-with-dew plants can dry off first thing in the
morning; it’s a great way to prevent disease problems before they start.
6. Rotate your crops. Speaking
of disease, you should also try and plant your tomatoes in a spot where
tomatoes have not grown the past couple of years. If that’s impossible,
remove as much of the soil as you can and replace it with a mix of half
compost and half topsoil—or half garden soil from tomato free areas.
Otherwise, your plants may wilt from a common disease that builds up in
soil where tomatoes are frequently planted. If that’s already happening
and you’ve already used every possible and/or potential planting plot,
try growing in BIG containers (at least 12 to 15 inches across).
7. Space them far apart. Be
sure to give your precious plants LOTS of room. Those little starts
will eventually produce vines that are ten to fourteen feet long. Plan
for that FULL size now, otherwise the plants will be too crowded and
disease will take its toll.
8. Cage them. Surround each
plant with a big cage
so the tomatoes don’t lay on the ground; and stake the cage so those
big vines don’t pull it down. Tomatoes are vines—they don’t grow
upright naturally—so you have to provide good support. Those flimsy
little things they sell as ‘tomato cages’ won’t do the job. Make a four
or five foot high circle out of sturdy animal fencing instead.
9. Bury them DEEP!
Tomatoes are unique in that any part of their stem buried in the ground
will grow auxiliary roots to take up more water and nutrients. So be
brave, pull off the bottom leaves and bury a good two-thirds of the
plant underground. You heard me! All you need is two to three inches
aboveground. And always plant in the evening, never in the morning; you
want to give your tomatoes time to get acclimated before they
experience a full day of burning sun.
10. Compost against disease!
When you’re all done, spread an inch or two of your highest quality
compost over the surface of the soil under your plants. This will
prevent weeds, feed your tomatoes, and—perhaps more importantly—the
billions of living organisms in that compost will prevent dread
diseases from attacking your plants.
Helpful
Products From Gardens Alive!
Grow Your Best Tomato Crop Ever!
Tomatoes
Alive!® Plus
This all-natural fertilizer produces vigorous plants, big crops and
luscious flavor in tomatoes!
Turbo-Tomato!™ Mulch
Imagine a 12-20% increase in your tomato crop! That's what this amazing
plastic mulch can do for your garden.
Soap-Shield®
Fungicidal Soap
With Soap-Shield, you now can grow vegetables, fruits and flowers that
you may have given up on because of their susceptibility to disease!